That's an excellent question. And I think I mean, the answer is complicated because I think you know, in sort of abroad, we can look at typically sort of big institutions like government, you know, law enforcement, education, religion, you know, media are going to tend to reinforce whatever the cultural sort of biases are, wherever the dominant culture is so prominently patriarchal culture, then all those things are going to tend to reinforce that. And I think that you can see that in all those institutions. But one thing that I'm always interested in, I think, especially as somebody in Women's and Gender Studies, is the places where there are kind of gaps where that doesn't work. And I think that I think that in both education and in, in media and social media, maybe in particular, it's like, there are lots of ways in which these institutions reinforce problematic notions and problematic sort of sexism and misogyny, but they're also interesting ways in which you know, within education within certain classrooms within certain disciplines. There is sort of creating space to talk about these things and to try to like find ways that we can, if nothing else, acknowledging that they're happening, maybe as a first step to pushing back and making them happen less. And so I feel like it's just today in my in my internal Mercedes class we were talking about incidental warrants or cultural right and social media and Instagram and Tiktok and, and how with regard to like, women's body and that's right, and now there's there can be so many problematic issues with that. And some influencers like some influencers aren't super honest about how much they're getting sponsored or what they're getting told to say and oh, yeah, for sure. They really kind of damaging or detrimental body images or practices, or whatever. Yeah, but how also, it's possible to curate your social media feed to like seek out better people to follow up people that are doing more interesting things. And if you kind of recognize how pernicious social media can be you can also deflect that by choosing to curate your feed more strongly, right and choosing follow to seek out and follow people who maybe are troubling those images or providing healthier images. And so I think that, you know, both with education and meet with governments and like law enforcement, I think those moves slower. So I think that you know, one of the I think real tensions that we're seeing right now, in this election year is that, you know, both the candidates are so old and so lucky like that, that even the candidate who is I think, you know, to me, it's like there's there's a big difference between the candidates. I mean, some people think there's not but there's instruments, but I think that the difference can sometimes get sort of erased a little bit because of the fact that they're both these like super old white dudes, right? And so even people who normally would be like, Well, I'm not going to, you know, I don't want to vote for Trump. I want to vote for somebody else. And they'd be like, Biden, you know, same old black guy doesn't get it, you know, doesn't understand like, whatever and so I think that we see this sort of like detachment, because Because government and law enforcement tends to be more conservative, more traditional, the wheels tend to turn much more slowly. Yeah, for sure. Representation tends to be much more slowly that there doesn't, I mean, I think like electing women is good, you know, like voting is good, like, make sure that people when people get into office that are going to represent you more accurately. All that is important, but I feel like there's less, it can be frustrating to see sort of less movement or shift in those organizations than we do and like educational or media organizations just because they tend to move a little bit faster. So I think, you know, the answer that question is Yeah, but all those things can be enforcement, but also there's room to like, kind of push back and kind of Yeah,